3 MomentumExample:A moving boulder has more momentum than a stone rolling at the same speed.A fast boulder has more momentum than a slow boulder.A boulder at rest has no momentum.

4 Impulse Example: Product of force and time (force  time)In equation form: Impulse = FtExample:A brief force applied over a short time interval produces a smaller change in momentum than the same force applied over a longer time interval.orIf you push with the same force for twice the time, you impart twice the impulse and produce twice the change in momentum.

6 Impulse Changes MomentumCase 1: increasing momentumApply the greatest force for as long as possible and you extend the time of contact.Force can vary throughout the duration of contact.Examples:Golfer swings a club andfollows through.Baseball player hits a ball and

7 Impulse Changes MomentumCase 2: decreasing momentum over a long timeextend the time during which momentum is reduced causes the force applied to be smaller.

8 Impulse Changes MomentumCHECK YOUR ANSWERA fast-moving car hitting a haystack or hitting a cement wall produces vastly different results. 1. Do both experience the same change in momentum? 2. Do both experience the same impulse? 3. Do both experience the same force?A. Yes for all threeYes for 1 and 2No for all threeNo for 1 and 2Explanation: Although stopping the momentum is the same whether done slowly or quickly, the force is vastly different. Be sure to distinguish among momentum, impulse, and force.B. Yes for 1 and 2.

9 Impulse Changes MomentumExamples:When a car is out of control, it is better to hit a haystack than a concrete wall.Physics reason: Same impulse either way, but extension of hitting time reduces the force.

10 Impulse Changes MomentumExample (continued):In jumping, bend your knees when your feet make contact with the ground because the extension of time during your momentum decrease reduces the force on you.In boxing, ride with the punch.

11 Impulse Changes MomentumCase 3: decreasing momentum over a short timeshort time interval produces large force.Example: Karate expert splits astack of bricks by bringing her arm and hand swiftly againstthe bricks with considerablemomentum. Time of contact isbrief and force of impact is huge.

12 Bouncing Impulses are generally greater when objects bounce. Example:Catching a falling flower pot from a shelf with your hands. You provide the impulse to reduce its momentum to zero. If you throw the flower pot up again, you provide an additional impulse. This “double impulse” occurs when something bounces.

13 BouncingPelton wheel designed to “bounce” water when it makes a U-turn on impact with the curved paddle

14 Conservation of MomentumLaw of conservation of momentum:In the absence of an external force, the momentum of a system remains unchanged.

15 Conservation of MomentumExamples:When a cannon is fired, the force on the cannonball inside the cannon barrel is equal and opposite to the force of the cannonball on the cannon.The cannonball gains momentum, while the cannon gains an equal amount of momentum in the opposite direction—the cannon recoils.When no external force is present, no external impulse is present, and no change in momentum is possible.

16 Conservation of MomentumExamples (continued):Internal molecular forces within a baseball come in pairs, cancel one another out, and have no effect on the momentum of the ball.Molecular forces within a baseball have no effect on its momentum.Pushing against a car’s dashboard has no effect on its momentum.

21 More Complicated CollisionsSometimes the colliding objects are not moving in the same straight line.In this case you create a parallelogram of the vectors describing each initial momentum to find the combined momentum.Example: collision of two cars at a corner

22 More Complicated CollisionsAnother example:A firecracker exploding; the total momentum of the pieces after the explosion can be added vectorially to get the initial momentum of the firecracker before it exploded.